We are in a crisis in the evolution of human society. It’s unique to both human and geologic history. It has never happened before and it can’t possibly happen again. Albert Bates, author of The Financial Collapse Survival Guide and Cookbook, brings you along on his personal journey.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Cubashima

" Without electricity
filling stations cannot pump. Cars pile up, first in long lines, as they did in
Russia and Cuba, then simply abandoned on the street. Four months after
Fukushima, streets still held cars without gasoline. When there is no gasoline
for cars, there is also no gasoline for trucks. This would include the trucks
that deliver groceries from farms and processing plants to stores. In Japan,
the shelves soon emptied of perishables, then staples such as rice, grains and
noodles."

Empty shelves in grocery stores in Japan

History may not repeat itself, but it rhymes, said Mark
Twain, and one of the verses we’ve been hearing is the sound of Japan tinkling
from nuclear fallout, in the chord of Chernobyl. In February of 2012, an
official Japanese inquiry revealed that evacuation of Tokyo was considered by
the government even before the hydrogen explosions at Fukushima Daichi but was
forestalled by ordering human cannon fodder into the blazing radioactive reactors.

Last week it was reported that a Tokyo evacuation would have
required the Kuril Islands to receive refugees, news that raised ire in Russia,
which captured the 56-island chain 810 miles off Japan’s northeastern shore at
the end of World War II and has no intention of returning it to Japan, even in
such dire circumstances.

Japanese diplomats assuaged their Russian counterparts by
revealing they were also “seriously considering” an offer by China to relocate
tens of millions of their citizens to the Chinese mainland to inhabit what are
called the “ghost cities,” built by the Chinese government in recent years for
reasons still unknown. In a 2010 article, London’s Daily Mail revealed, “Some estimates put the number of empty homes
at as many as 64 million, with up to 20 new cities being built every year in
the country's vast swathes of free land.”

The Fukushima reactor complex is not out of the frying pan, the
Japanese government is still attempting to make an omelet from its broken eggs,
while occasionally acknowledging it hasn’t a clue how to do that. Arnie Gunderson of Fairewinds Associates told Alex
Smith on Radio Ecoshock earlier this month that the nuclear fuel pools left
tottering in blown up buildings would be toppled by another earthquake, putting
Tokyo at risk. And, he said, the likelihood of another large earthquake there,
soon, is very high.

Toru Sakawa

Gundersen said it is unlikely there would be an explosion as
the Fuke #4 swimming pool collapses, but dangerous “hot” particles would still
be propelled around the world, because within two days of the collapse, the
Zircalloy and radioactive metals (Technicium, Strontium, Cesium and Plutonium,
for instance) would burn at a very high temperature, sending particles eight
miles high. The result would be an everlasting disaster for Japan that could
create a permanent no-man’s strip 50 miles wide across the country, dividing it
in half and, by the way, lethally contaminating Tokyo, 238 km (148 mi) to the
South. Gunderson said that anyone living in or near Tokyo should evacuate at
the first news of another earthquake and fire at the plant.

Meeting at Toru Sakawa's farm

One of the best talks at the 11th Australasian Permaculture
Convergence in Turangi, New Zealand last week was by Toru Sakawa, a
permaculture farmer and teacher in Northern Japan. Toru began his permaculture
career 20 years ago in New Zealand, as a WWoOFer at Rainbow Valley Farm, where
he received his permaculture design certificate.

The Biodiesel Adventure tour distills its own fuel as it goes

Shoe delivery in Fukushima Prefecture

When the earthquake, tsunami and nuclear disaster befell his
country on March 11, 2011, Toru’s farm was being visited by an expeditionary
film crew called Biodiesel Adventure, which had been driving around the world on waste vegetable oil. Leaving Tokyo
in December, 2007, they had driven from Vancouver to Washington DC, including a
stop at Los Angeles Eco Village, then Europe, Africa, Kazakhstan, Russia, China,
and back to Japan.

In the months that followed the disaster, they could
continue to drive around Fukushima Prefecture when no-one else could, because
they made their own fuel onboard the vehicle. Heroically, they abandoned their view
tour and morphed into Biodiesel Relief, using Toru’s farm as their base camp.

The nuclear meltdown at Chernobyl
20 years ago this month, even more than my launch of perestroika, was perhaps the real cause of the collapse of the Soviet
Union five years later… The price of the Chernobyl catastrophe was
overwhelming, not only in human terms, but also economically. Even today, the
legacy of Chernobyl affects the economies of Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus... The
twentieth anniversary of the Chernobyl catastrophe reminds us that we should
not forget the horrible lesson taught to the world in 1986. We should do
everything in our power to make all nuclear facilities safe and secure. We
should also start seriously working on the production of the alternative
sources of energy.

Breadline in Russia after Chernobyl

Lest we forget, it was the collapse of the former Soviet
Union that precipitated the “Special Period” in Cuba, wherein the Cuban export
trade disintegrated, imports of subsidized commodities, especially petroleum,
vanished overnight, and the population was left to a diet of one-third less daily
calories and clunky Chinese bicycles to take them to and from work. Cuba became
a nation of skinny farmers, growing 80% of the food consumed by Havana within city
limits.

We might not have expected to see that rhyme repeated in
Japan, but it has begun being chanted. Some things happened right after the
multiple meltdown that were not in anyone’s emergency planning documents, but this
is what a nuclear meltdown feels like.

Waiting for gas in Japan

Without electricity filling stations cannot pump. Cars pile
up, first in long lines, as they did in Russia and Cuba, then simply abandoned
on the street. Four months after Fukushima, streets still held cars without
gasoline.

When there is no gasoline for cars, there is also no
gasoline for trucks. This would include the trucks that deliver groceries from
farms and processing plants to stores. In Japan, the shelves soon emptied of
perishables, then staples such as rice, grains and noodles. What was left?
Candy. Soda. Beer and liquor. If you are thinking of what to stockpile for the
financial collapse, the end of the dollar and the confiscation of gold, those
cases of Grand Marnier and Beluga caviar may not be as good an idea as you
thought.

Filling station out of gas

Toru Sakawa and Biodiesel Relief spent the past year making
fuel from waste oil and moving supplies from farms to evacuation centers. What
did they need most? Well, first, food. Toru shared his winter supplies of rice
and grains, dried meat and eggs. Then he went to a neighbor to learn how to
make tofu in a traditional wood-fired kitchen.

Next, shoes. People had run out of their homes in the night
barefoot. Then, bicycles. Bicycles are still more popular today and more people
ride them than before the earthquake.

In Russia food trucks stopped at the first apartment houses

Another similarity between Cuba and Japan was the sheer
scale of the crisis burning up telephone wires and Blackberries in capitols --
surpassing any that had happened before then. In the Cuban missile crisis the
White House and Kremlin were on hair triggers, the US talking about an air
strike against missile silos that Pentagon generals were blissfully unaware
were already armed and launch-ready, under the command of field officers, and
aimed at major cities where their families lived.

In Japan they were thinking of sending 20 to 60 million
people to Russia and China. Bureaucrats were tasked to draw up contingency
plans, post-haste, like, by next morning, if you please? The mind
boggles.

In Cuba the crisis was fueled by a combination of the Monroe
Doctrine (the US retains its Manifest Destiny to be the sole colonial empire in
the Western Hemisphere), a rabid Cold War political dialectic -- better dead
than red – and an inchoate fear that whatever philosophy Fidel Castro had
contracted fighting against Generalisimo Batista might be contagious. All
patently insane.

In the latter case the crisis came from the technological
insanity -- borne of advertising hype; peaceful atoms, energy too cheap to
meter -- of untethered desire to power superspeed trains and svelt coffee pots
by bubbling a brew of the deadliest poisons ever invented, at temperatures
approaching the Sun’s.

Permaculture Plan for Refugee Ecovillages

In both countries the insanity was driven by herd behavior,
with each herd -- generals, politicians, consumers, engineers -- conditioned to
be stampeded easily. Fortunately for us, John F. Kennedy was less easily cowed
than were post-war Japanese industrialists, economists, politicians and
antinuclear activists. Both Kennedy and Khrushchev understood the enormity of
the risk, and the Cuban crisis was brought back from the brink by cool-headed
negotiation. In Japan the juggernaut that bought us a crisis that no one has
yet invented a way out of still grows larger by the day.

At least the Chinese have pre-positioned some empty cities.
This is a wise preparation for any nation considering following its nuclear Sirens’
wails.

2 comments:

Generated nuclear energy is far too expensive and it is not necessary. The only reason it pursued as an energy source is that it is entirely proprietary and fits into the hierarchical economic model. Like petroleum. Solar is an anti-thesis to this economic model, since the ownership can be so easily owned by the population ... and even better deal than personal computers.

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Albert Bates, author of The Post Petroleum Survival Guide and Cookbook, brings you along on his personal journey.

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